PX : code by K. S. Bhaskar

GT.M (http://www.sanchez-gtm.com) is a vetted, industrial strength, transaction processing application platform consisting of a database engine optimized for high TP throughput and a compiler for the M (comp.lang.mumps) programming language. There is a reasonable likelihood that your personal bank balance may already reside in a GT.M database. The implementation of GT.M for x86 GNU/Linux is GPL'd open source free software; on other computing platforms, it is more traditionally licensed.
The synergy between M and PHP is that their variables look very much alike, except that M also has the concept of "global" variables, which are shared and persistent (i.e., accessing or updating an M global variable is actually a database operation). The PHP GT.M client would be an excellent way to endow PHP variables with persistence and to share them between processes, even on different machines. This would create a much lighter footprint database capability for PHP than a traditional relational database, and one whose model (hierarchical associative memory) more closely models real world data.
A field test version of the client is available at the GT.M project page at Source Forge (http://sourceforge.net/projects/sanchez-gtm). The production version is expected to follow in due course. There is a forum at the GT.M project summary to discuss the PHP client. Please also post support requests to Support at the GT.M project summary, and bugs to Bugs. We will respond as we are able to.
-- Bhaskar (yes, it's my last name, but that's what I am called)
K.S. Bhaskar
Sanchez Computer Associates, Inc.
40 Valley Stream Parkway
Malvern, PA 19355, USA
+1 (610) 578-4265
k dot bhaskar at sanchez dot com
http://www.sanchez.com
http://www.sanchez-gtm.com
http://sourceforge.net/projects/sanchez-gtm

GT.M (http://www.sanchez-gtm.com) is a vetted, industrial strength, transaction processing application platform consisting of a database engine optimized for high TP throughput and a compiler for the M (comp.lang.mumps) programming language. There is a reasonable likelihood that your personal bank balance may already reside in a GT.M database. The implementation of GT.M for x86 GNU/Linux is GPL'd open source free software; on other computing platforms, it is more traditionally licensed.
The synergy between M and PHP is that their variables look very much alike, except that M also has the concept of "global" variables, which are shared and persistent (i.e., accessing or updating an M global variable is actually a database operation). The PHP GT.M client would be an excellent way to endow PHP variables with persistence and to share them between processes, even on different machines. This would create a much lighter footprint database capability for PHP than a traditional relational database, and one whose model (hierarchical associative memory) more closely models real world data.
A field test version of the client is available at the GT.M project page at Source Forge (http://sourceforge.net/projects/sanchez-gtm). The production version is expected to follow in due course. There is a forum at the GT.M project summary to discuss the PHP client. Please also post support requests to Support at the GT.M project summary, and bugs to Bugs. We will respond as we are able to.
-- Bhaskar (yes, it's my last name, but that's what I am called)
K.S. Bhaskar
Sanchez Computer Associates, Inc.
40 Valley Stream Parkway
Malvern, PA 19355, USA
+1 (610) 578-4265
k dot bhaskar at sanchez dot com
http://www.sanchez.com
http://www.sanchez-gtm.com
http://sourceforge.net/projects/sanchez-gtm

GT.M (http://www.sanchez-gtm.com) is a vetted, industrial strength, transaction processing application platform consisting of a database engine optimized for high TP throughput and a compiler for the M (comp.lang.mumps) programming language. There is a reasonable likelihood that your personal bank balance may already reside in a GT.M database. The implementation of GT.M for x86 GNU/Linux is GPL'd open source free software; on other computing platforms, it is more traditionally licensed.
The synergy between M and PHP is that their variables look very much alike, except that M also has the concept of "global" variables, which are shared and persistent (i.e., accessing or updating an M global variable is actually a database operation). The PHP GT.M client would be an excellent way to endow PHP variables with persistence and to share them between processes, even on different machines. This would create a much lighter footprint database capability for PHP than a traditional relational database, and one whose model (hierarchical associative memory) more closely models real world data.
A field test version of the client is available at the GT.M project page at Source Forge (http://sourceforge.net/projects/sanchez-gtm). The production version is expected to follow in due course. There is a forum at the GT.M project summary to discuss the PHP client. Please also post support requests to Support at the GT.M project summary, and bugs to Bugs. We will respond as we are able to.
-- Bhaskar (yes, it's my last name, but that's what I am called)
K.S. Bhaskar
Sanchez Computer Associates, Inc.
40 Valley Stream Parkway
Malvern, PA 19355, USA
+1 (610) 578-4265
k dot bhaskar at sanchez dot com
http://www.sanchez.com
http://www.sanchez-gtm.com
http://sourceforge.net/projects/sanchez-gtm

GT.M (http://www.sanchez-gtm.com) is a vetted, industrial strength, transaction processing application platform consisting of a database engine optimized for high TP throughput and a compiler for the M (comp.lang.mumps) programming language. There is a reasonable likelihood that your personal bank balance may already reside in a GT.M database. The implementation of GT.M for x86 GNU/Linux is GPL'd open source free software; on other computing platforms, it is more traditionally licensed.
The synergy between M and PHP is that their variables look very much alike, except that M also has the concept of "global" variables, which are shared and persistent (i.e., accessing or updating an M global variable is actually a database operation). The PHP GT.M client would be an excellent way to endow PHP variables with persistence and to share them between processes, even on different machines.
A field test version of the client is available at the GT.M project page at Source Forge (http://sourceforge.net/projects/sanchez-gtm). The production version is expected to follow in due course. There is a forum at the GT.M project summary to discuss the PHP client. Please also post support requests to Support at the GT.M project summary, and bugs to Bugs. We will respond as we are able to.

Comments or questions?
PX is running PHP 5.2.17
Thanks to Miranda Productions for hosting and bandwidth.
Use of any code from PX is at your own risk.